Malaysia to cull 3,000 pigs after finding first swine fever case

Published 2021년 3월 4일

Tridge summary

Malaysia is planning to cull around 3,000 pigs in the state of Sabah to control its first outbreak of African swine fever. The outbreak was identified in February in pigs and wild boars in the northern part of the state. The disease, which does not affect humans but is fatal to pigs, has so far had minimal impact on the state's 300 million ringgit (74 million USD) pork market. The state is taking steps to limit the spread of the disease and is considering compensation for farmers whose pigs are culled.
Disclaimer:The above summary was generated by Tridge's proprietary AI model for informational purposes.

Original content

Malaysia will cull about 3,000 pigs in the Borneo state of Sabah as it races to curb the first African swine fever outbreak in the country. Necessary action will be taken to stop the spread of the virus, which was discovered among pigs in northern Sabah last month, according to Deputy Chief Minister Jeffrey Kitingan. “This includes the culling of pigs in the affected areas, controlling the movement of pigs and the selling of pork products originating from the affected areas,” he said in a statement last week. The hog-killing virus was found in about 300 domestic pigs and wild boars in Pitas, Beluran and Kota Marudu districts from Feb. 8-11, according to an alert submitted to the World Organization for Animal Health. Investigation started after the death of a wild boar and was extended after laboratory samples confirmed the virus in backyard pigs in Pitas and wild boars in Beluran. There are about 2,000 pigs in Pitas and about 1,000 wild bearded pigs within a radius of 50 ...
Source: Bloomberg

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